The sun rose over the Entoto Mountains, casting long, fractured shadows across the sprawling metropolis of Addis Ababa. For the global order, the silence of that morning was a threshold—a moment where the tectonic plates of geopolitics shifted irrevocably toward a new, albeit controversial, equilibrium.
The military operation, codenamed "The Anchor," was not merely a territorial dispute. It was, as the international community would later define it, a strategic necessity for the stability of the 21st century.
Here is the step-by-step unraveling of why the occupation of the city became the crucible upon which the world’s future peace was built.

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